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Reviewed in the United States on February 3, 2025
Works exactly as described. Having a hardware switch to ensure duplication vs mtp is awesome. Great build quality
New Guy
Reviewed in the United States on February 24, 2025
Running two Dell 4k monitors at 60hz using the onboard Intel gpu in a Dell 8960 XPS together with a NVIDIA 3500 8gb to run four more monitors for a total of six. Starts right up and seems stable so far.
Brian M
Reviewed in the United States on January 21, 2025
Runs two QHD (2560x1440 monitors at 144hz with 0 issues.I am getting the issue of the monitor occasionally cycling on and off with no signal input when the PCs off, which is due to the extra 5v input. I know that's a fairly common issue with these so I'll be generous and not remove any stars.
Straight Talker
Reviewed in the United States on September 23, 2024
I got this Multi-Stream Transport (MST) hub in case I wanted to connect more than three monitors over DisplayPort because my GPU only has three ports. The first use case I tried was having 1920x1080p @165Hz and 3840x2160p @60Hz connected to it. This worked fine, but I went to hot swap the 1080p monitor to my 2560x1600p @144Hz monitor, and my Windows crashed. I'm guessing that hot swapping isn't very stable with this, so don't expect to have a much better experience with it than me. I then tried to do 2560x1600p @144Hz and 3840x2160p @60Hz over this hub and it crashed both times I tried to do so. It could do 1600p @120Hz alongside the 2160p @60Hz, though. I suspect this is because the cable I connected from my hub to my computer is DisplayPort 1.2 and it didn't have enough bandwidth. It shouldn't just crash, though. I also have the monitors go black for a second when I first get into Windows and they come back on. It doesn't mess anything up, but it's annoying. The mirrored "splitter" mode works, but you'll be limited to the max resolution of the lower resolution monitor. Switching from MST to "splitter" works and doesn't crash Windows, but it takes a good 15 seconds for the screens to come back when you switch back to MST.One thing to note is that there are no DisplayPort cables included. I recommend buying a 1.5 or shorter foot DisplayPort 1.4 cable to go from your computer to the hub. It comes with a USB-C to USB-A cable, a 5 volt 2.1 amp USB-A wall adapter (a rarity among devices nowadays), and a useless manual. I'm not sure what the 3.5mm jack on it is supposed to be for, but I'm not very worried about it because I don't use audio over DisplayPort regardless. The DACs on my monitors aren't as good or versatile as the one I use. The hub actually works over a USB-C to USB-C connection for power. I have seen so many devices (even high dollar, mind you) that simply didn't think to spend two cents on pulldown resistors so that a USB-C power source knows to give it five volts. USB-A gives five volts no matter what while USB-C needs to know that the device wants it.Overall, this is a capable MST hub, but it's not a perfect, flawless device in my testing. I would likely have a better experience if I were to have a DisplayPort 1.4 cable to connect it to my computer. I could see this MST hub being more versatile than another hub that has the cable built in because this could be used at the end of an optical DisplayPort run through a wall to use two monitors. It could also be fastened to the back of a monitor to get a jank daisy chain for a monitor that doesn't have a DisplayPort output. I recommend to give it a try, as it likely will suit your needs.
J.Cooper
Reviewed in the United States on September 18, 2024
Not being too cable and tech savvy, I jumped at this thinking it would be a great way to get my lower end laptop to use two more monitors. I had assumed everything was HDMI..that's what my laptop uses, and that's what both of my monitors use. Unfortunately, this device only handles Displayport, which is too techy for my workstation. I now have a cute lil black brick for my desk. :D
veneilijä
Reviewed in the United States on December 24, 2024
I got this to use at work with my M1 Macbook Pro and two DisplayPort monitors. Unfortunately, it doesn't work with the M1 Macbook Pro, and only one monitor comes through. Maybe its due to my monitors, but I suspect it is just because the M1 Macbook doesn't support MST mode. It works with another Windows desktop computer that I have though, and the supported resolution and refresh rate is great. Just doesn't work with my Macbook.
dexter
Reviewed in the United States on November 15, 2024
I have been trying to add a third monitor for quite some time now. I have tried a few different brands here on Amazon. All of them had some type of issue. My favorite issue was that random screen flash. So I wasn't expecting much when I got this. This has worked out really well for me. It was easy to connect and get connected and I have had not one issue since. I can checkmark this and move on:)
Crash
Reviewed in the United States on November 13, 2024
The ENBUER DisplayPort Splitter Adapter seems well made and worked well. I connected it to a Display Port on my system and plugged in two Display Port cables to my monitors. One monitor has a resolution of 1920 x 1080 at 165Hz and the other was 3840 x 2160 at 60Hz and both monitor were on extend with different pictures. The displays looked just as good as if they were directly connected to a Display Port. Recommend.
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